Francis Ford Coppola exonerated from #MeToo accusations
Francis Ford Coppola is one of the most respected film directors, producers, and writers in American history.
In May 2024, Francis Ford Coppola also became a victim of internet cancel culture.
Was it deserved?
Breitbart's John Nolte thinks absolutely not.
In addition to a lot of vague reports online from unconfirmed sources, the below video of Francis Ford Coppola with an actor in one of his films was supposedly proof of the Old Man's disgusting ways.
The people posting that video as proof of Coppola's wrongdoing apparently never thought of the possibility that the people in the video might need to corroborate that the advances were unwanted or inappropriate.
Well, the actress featured in the above video has had enough of the slander of Coppola, and is telling her side of the story:
Coppola did NOT do anything to make her feel uncomfortable, and it was "gross" that people were using this video as evidence that Coppola had done anything wrong.
The only person who could decide if what Coppola did in that video was wrong was the actress, Rayna Menz.
Menz COMPLETELY exonerated the age 85 director:
"He did nothing to make me or for that matter anyone on set feel uncomfortable. I felt disgusted, I was blindsided by [the video leaking] because it was a closed set. [The fact] that someone had video of that is just ridiculous and super unprofessional. It’s gross because he only ever spoke about how wonderful his wife is."
I'm not saying that somebody can't compliment their wife and still do gross things, but that definitely isn't how Rayna Menz is telling the story.
Until one of Coppola's "victims" shows up with some actual proof, I think it's safe to assume the director is innocent until proven guilty.
If you are interested in learning more about the facts of this story, please feel free to click on the original source link here.